199 A. 204 | Pa. | 1938
Appellant is surety on the bond of Albert J. Perry, appointed tax collector for South Brownsville Borough as of April 1, 1920. The bond was conditioned upon Perry's paying or accounting for the tax charged in his duplicate; it contains a warrant of attorney to confess judgment. In September, 1936, judgment was entered on the bond upon an affidavit that Perry was in default for the year 1920. This was 16 years after the bond was given. Appellant petitioned the court below to open the judgment and let it into a defense for the reason that *357 the county was barred by the Act of April 4, 1798, 3 Smith's Laws 331, Section 4. The petition to open was dismissed by a divided court.
Appellee takes the position that the Act of 1798 does not bar action on the bond in the present case. It insists first that the bond is a sealed instrument and that the defense of this statute of limitations has no application. Section 4 of the Act of 1798 reads as follows: ". . . it shall not be lawful for any person or persons whomsoever to commence and maintain any suit or suits on any bonds or recognizances, which shall hereafter be given and entered into by any person or persons, as sureties for any public officer, from and after the expiration of the term of seven years, to be computed from the time at which the cause of action shall have accrued; and if any such suit or suits shall be commenced, contrary to the intent and meaning of this act, the defendant or defendants respectively shall and may plead the general issue, and give this act and the special matter in evidence; and if the plaintiff or plaintiffs be nonsuit, or if a verdict or judgment pass against him or them respectively, the defendant or defendants shall respectively recover double costs."
Simply because the bond in the present case contains a warrant to confess judgment would not prolong its life as an obligation. Negotiable paper may under given conditions contain such warrant but it is still subject to the ordinary rule of limitations, not being under seal. The determinative factor is the character of the obligation itself. The instrument here given is a specialty, being under seal, but as an official bond it is within the particular class of sealed instruments for which the statute provides a special period of limitations. SeeGlover v. Wilson,
The legislature, at the time the Act of 1798 was passed, could have contemplated nothing other than sealed instruments in treating of "bonds." Their purpose was *358
clearly to create a special statute of limitations for this class of specialties. By long established definition, a bond is a specialty or sealed instrument. Blackstone says (Book II, Ch. 20, page 340): "An obligation or bond is a deed whereby the obligor obliges himself, his heirs, executors and administrators, to pay a certain sum of money to another at a day appointed." See also Bouvier's Law Dictionary (3d Rev. Ed.), 375. In Williams v. Florida,
The case of Lehigh County v. Gossler,
The purpose of the Act was to place a reasonable limit on the liability of sureties on official bonds. Whether the statute be called one of limitation or one of repose, its effect is to require diligence on the part of the municipal authorities in pursuing their remedies. The language of the Act imposing the limitation is explicit, and stronger than that usually found in statutes of this sort. A similar Act, that of March 28, 1803, P. L. 497, Section 4, creating a limitation of five years for suits on sheriff's bonds merely states that "suit . . . shall not be sustained by any court of this commonwealth" after the running of the period. This Act also has been held to bar untimely actions on a sheriff's bond regardless of the fact that it is under seal. See Commonwealth v. Rainey, 4 W. S. 186.
The case of Shively v. McDonnell,
Appellee contends, however, that the effect of the Act of 1798 has been vitiated by subsequent legislation extending the period of time during which a tax collector's warrant remains in force. The Act of April 22, 1846, P. L. 486, Section 21, provides that the warrant shall be effectual for two years and no more. There are Acts extending the life of warrants for additional periods of time, but it does not appear that Perry had availed himself of any such extension after the expiration of the initial two-year period, and we cannot assume advantage must have been taken of these extending Acts even if they were applicable.
Moreover these Acts extending the life of a collector's warrant did not suspend the operation of the Act of 1798 automatically, nor did they extend the period for payment over by the collector of the amounts charged to him upon his duplicate. See Commonwealth, to use, v. Ferrell, 17 C. C. 263. Appellee mistakenly asserts that *360
the cause of action against the tax collector in the present case was in abeyance until the expiration of his warrant, and arose at the end of the extended period; that its claim therefore was not yet barred by the seven-year limitation. The case as presented does not justify any such conclusion. Ordinarily the collector is accountable for the entire amount of the tax duplicate three months from its delivery to him. The Act of June 25, 1885, P. L. 187, Section 5, provides that borough tax collectors shall have the same powers and obligations as those of tax collectors theretofore, bringing them within the operation of section 49 of the Act of April 15, 1834, P. L. 509. As to the effect of that section seeGlover v. Wilson, supra; Commonwealth, to use, v. Stambaugh,
The cases cited by appellee in support of its contention that the right of action accrues at the expiration of the warrant refer not to the right of action by the county or borough against the collector, but to the collector's right of action against the taxpayer. See Wickersham v. Russell,
It is true that in McKeehan v. Commonwealth,
It is also objected that the Act of 1798 is a bar only to adverse actions at law and does not preclude amicable actions or the entry of judgment by confession after the seven-year period. This argument needs no refutation. The language of the statute embraced all actions whether amicable or adverse and included the one here attempted.
It is well settled that the plea of the statute of limitations is a valid and equitable defense which may be raised upon the opening of a judgment. Although at one time the plea may have been regarded as inequitable and technical, our courts have long since changed their attitude with respect to it. In Philadelphia, B. W. R. R. v. Quaker City F. M. Co.,
The judgment entered upon the bond in favor of appellee should have been opened, and, on the issues submitted, unless a situation differing from that here discussed appears, a verdict and judgment should be entered for appellant.
Order reversed with a procedendo.